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Chicago examiner for the addrejj^where yolbpust register for draft in Chicago tuesday see it^h re-ristct-td c a patent office vol xv no 1-40 a xt saturday price tw o cents and bcbckbm tjii.ke cl'-sjflj saturday ' Chicago june 2 1917 25 are arrested for treason i fl si r ____â– hundreds of plotters to bfl monday following nfi in cincinnati wilsofl conscription can't befi ah national and state agentiw to assist in bringing in all oifi military age gregory calls on civilian volunteers to assist cincinnati 0 june i mor<fl than twenty-five men were ar rested to-night on warranty charging treason in connection w b the alleged nation-wide plot to intdfin fere with draft registration the _| are alleged to have been distributing circulars condemning the act jjb all the men will be given a nfl mal hearing before united ritatfi commissioner adler to-morrow fl the district attorney has not fi dicated what penalty will be i fi the penalty for treason war timefi death or at the discretion of fl court in extraordinary circumstamfl imprisonment for a term of not les than five years and a fine of 10,000 ' hundreds of plotters ' j to be jailed monday washington june i.â€”anti draft agitation in various parts of the country was the principal subject of discussion at to-day's cabinet meet it was decided the full power of the government should be employed i to insure the successful administra i tion of the draft law all depart ment heads have been instructed to co-operate with tho department of justice in crushing opposition to registration and rounding up slack ers every government official to assist every government official will b*i called upon to assist the registration i of the 10,000,000 and to point out men failing to register the huge post office machinery will be used in this connection in addition attorney j general gregor l.e-aay culled j civilian volunteers jgs before j the cabinet meeting ifl president issued a proclamatf^bÃŸ warning those subject to registrational against ljeaving the country before â– registration day the president it was said la pre paring to make a public appeal w patriotism for aid in conducting __[| registration the pronouncement^^b expected to be published eithor^m registration morning or the day s fore b treason charges -Â§Â§! strike terror m the government's quick and _| cisive action in jailing rlngle;.'u r jfl the anti-registration propatrand mm announcing that the oijj.i s | would be tried a3 traitors has '"___â€¢ plotters hearts am reports late to-d/jfy to the bslfis ment oi justice i/howed a '' ol flg_^j _________! j ________ j greatest russ fort seized by workmen kronstadt defending petrograd is taken by council soldiers declare â€¢ provisional govern | merit's authority overthrown commander quits and other offi cial are ousted relations levered admiral s sea command s â€” a dispatch to roÃŸtiid ays a i r of commerce nnd i there is com tsssreen him and m of labor concern financiiil measures esent crisis une i the gov nissioner at kron ortress defending igned as a result the local council orkingmen's dele it is in sole au j\ie workmen's and ito assunfe control \ carried by 210 vfth eight of the j-i-hority idi jy i the workmen's lattts that hence of kronstadt with emsdnder 0 f r u s irodsh the inter irogrrad branch of at a r.mmtadt an take-p in its hands r of 1 kronstad t ; ecogni-se thc pro t nnd thnt it ha vernmtent*k repre \ eep ; eet \ een vldfi adn iral er in chief of the id the douncil uf ten's delegates lias licial ne-ssfs agency liral remaining at pol i nty miles west of he main jfortress an capital it is om the baftic sea il headquarters in unknown open unknown ipetrograjfl dls that the en lists is b(t&in kgainst amin ire to pajra ften decide 1 fit he largest fl of whilch fl v.l'.izv bmar.(j a bviiir dab bbomen o fi^rhave air national guard to be in france by fall 11 id compose perswb reserve regular army to remain in u s until later to train its own increments and conscript army wooden camps in north * washington june l â€” the na tional guard will bo on the french front in time for the autumn drive according to indications at the war department to-day they are ex . pected to be in tho first reinforce j ments for the first division which major general john j pershing will command in france tte regular army will be held in america until later to train its own new increments and the 800 000 se lective conscripts who will be brought in through the draft the first actual draft will prob ably be september 5 word to this effect was spread through the war department following an announce ment by secretary baker that only 6i-f,teen of the thirty-two new train ing camps would bo of wooden con struction these will be in the northern states the men at the otb er sixteen camps will be under can vas these camps will be situated in the southern states baker's annornc'ement secretary baker made the follow ing statement the original plan was to build ihlrty-two cantonments or divi sional encampments the depart ment commanders were called upon to appoint boards to study the available places and make recom mendations which would lead to the selection of thirty-two such places the quartermaster general's de partment co-operating with the council of national defense com mittee studied the project and dis covered that the cost of building the number of cantonments contem plated would be beyond the possi bilities of the appropriation that congress is now considering it was further discovered that it would be impracticable to build that number on account of lack of la bor material and transportation facilities the war college recommenda tion that the number be reduced to ~~ sixteen guard to south as at present contemplated the general staff plan is said to ba to send the national guard to canvas cantonments in the south for a short period of intensive training and then to start a movement overseas the guard will be brought into the serv ice on july 15 and 25 and august 5 while the untrained conscripts will not begin to enter the army until september secretary baker also said the first estimated cost of tlie thirty-two can efinments had been 77,000.000 this was the amount asked of congress its*rca-rÂ«t**4-*rtit*n showed lrostvs?verr--+lÂ»iit ihe proposed wooden cities would cost at least 5150,000,000 dupee gives new version of kohl death i relates struggle with kohl to save wife from being choked and fight for revolver | inquest will be held to-day full inquiry into rumors aris ing from case is promised walter h dupee noted polo player last night gave an entirely new ver sion of the battle that preceded the death of charles e kohl millionaire theatrical magnate at oconomowoc in a signed statement he said sunday morning mr and mrs kohl and i went fishing after we had finished fishing mr and mrs kohl and i took an automo bile ride and returned to their home about 6 o'clock in the even - ing from there we went to mrs kohl sr.'s for supper the two misses kohl mr and mrs kohl mrs kohl sr another gentleman and i were the only ones at table after supper we with the excep tion of mrs kohl sr returned to charles kohl's residence and stayed there until about 10:30 when the party broke up doro thy and caroline kohl returned to their home shortly after they left the house mr and mrs kohl re tired and so did i tries to choke wife i had been in bed about an hour when i was awakened by the beat ing down of doors and screams i went out in the hall and found mr kohl choking mrs kohl say ing he was going to murder her he was acting like a madman i did the best i could to separate them and finally did so mr kohl ran across the hall went into the room of his seven-year old son and slapped him so hard the child was hysterical for some lime he then came downstairs where mrs kohl and i had gone and again attacked her 1 went to her assistance again and got them sep arated he then ran upstairs and came down with a revolver shots fired in struggle 7 tried to take the revolver away froaa him and mrs kohl joined the struggle that was the time he fired the shots which fortunately did no harm we telephoned for the police and they were over an hour in getting there we then got mr kohl to bed and he went to sleep mrs kohl sr had arrived and stayed about an hour and we thought everything was all right she went home and had no sooner gotten there when we were obliged to telephone her again as mr kohl had awakened dressed himself in his soldier's uni form and came downstairs when he got down i asked hrm u s weather forecast Chicago and vicinity â€” show ers and thunderstorms saturday snndny generally fair nnd somewhat warmer fresh shifting winds with squalls temperature for 24 hours ending 2 a m highest 50s lowest 47 mean s3 normal temperature for the day zt deficiency of temperature since january 1 ito precipitation for twenty-four hours ending it 7 p ic trace deficiency since january 1 2.77 relative humidity 7 > ra tl 2 p m 03 7 p m 80 barometric pressure reduced to sea lerei 7 3 m 30 02 7 t in 30.04 sunrise to-day 533 sunset 7:19 complete soternkent leport oa pace is . seek 250,000 hidden in bank tangle i attorney general will ask re 1 ceiver for commercial national \ / fire insurance co to-day assets of closed morgan park 1 and auburn institutional and j 50,000 deposit canceled attorney general brundage an 1 nounced in springfield last night he will file a petition to-day in the su perior court here for a receiver for the commercial national fire insur ance company mark p bransfield vice president of the auburn and morgan park state banks closed may 22 by state auditor russel is president of the insurance company the action is being taken to find the 250,000 assets for which state officials have searched in vain since the banks closed even since the auditor took charge of the banks the chief insurance ex aminer has been in Chicago trying to ascertain the extent to which the commercial national would be af fected when he requested permis sion to examine the banks insurance assets bransfield told him he could not enter unable to find securities he returned later when the bank examiners had finished their work he was not able to locate the se curities and neither bransfield nor thomas f mcfarland president of the banks would aid him the se curities are supposed to be hidden in a safe deposit box the insurance company vas a war bride it has general offices in the j otis building it has twice been warned of irregularities when the examiner's efforts were blocked su perintendent of insurance potter asked the attorney general to file a jjetition for a receiver did war business the commercial national was or ganized in 1915 with a cash capital of 200,000 its assets the first year were 387,234 total liabilities ex clusive of capital 136,128 reserve for reinsurance 100,084 surplus 51,106 the net premiums for the first year were 208,125 the total income was 221,977 with total expenditure of 98,084 it paid losses of 44,264 then marine risks on merchandise shipped to the war zone amazingly increased revenues in the first quar ter of 1916 the last covered in its re port for this quarter assets were 267,932 the profits for that quarter were 61 per~"cent and bransfietdt tet - ftr*r friends in on the ground floor one was william t rigney treasurer of the james a sackley paving com pany â€” ... mr rigney purchased 1,250 stock last december 20 he gave his note bransfield discounted it and when the state banking department listed j the loans it placed the rigney note in the doubtful class mr rigney yeste.rday posted a certified check for the full amount no more war brides for me ho , said i am going to stick to pav ing assistant state's attorney edwin j rober who has charge of the prost ecution of bransfield and mcfar land will be asked to investigate several loans totaling 200,000 which it is alleged were made to the bankers by lar e loop banks he will inqu re also into the ab i sence ie bal k's books of 50,000 | said t_^ft.ve been deposited by the â– i fcx"sehn ii jâ€”^â€”^iihf gerard sees 2 years war for america new york june i two years of war is the minimum the united states may expect james w gerard former ambassador to germany declared to-day at a luncheon of the broadway as sociation he said germany has an army of nearly 12,000,000 de spite its losses banker pais boy's ransom i father of stolen child returns from trip and waits did not see kidnapers springfield mo jnne i keet returned shortly after midnight he declared that be did not see the kid napers every circumstance points to the fact that keet in keeping with the instructions of the kidnapers handed over the money he is now waiting for news from the kidnapers telling him where the child is to be found springfield mo june i j holland keet springfield banker is believed to have paid the kidnapers of his fourteen-months-old child 10 000 ransom to-night and is waiting for the return of the boy at his home keet left tlie city to-night at 10 o'clock in an auto alone two hours later lie returned he insisted he had not seen the kidnapers themselves but everjthing indicates he followed out their instructions in turning over the ransom this morning a boy brought keet a letter which is believed to have contained new instructions demand ing 10,000 instead of 6,000 first set to-night keet demanding friends and thc police remain away started on his solitary trip he had gone but a few blocks when a second car believed to have contained the kid napers or their emissaries swung into line behind him both left the city keet's friends believe the baby will be left somewhere to-morrow and keet notified mrs kate keet mother of j hol land keet is said to be one of the wealthiest women in southwestern missouri the child is heir to her 3,000,000 estate detectives are working on the clew that pat crowe of the cudahy case may be implicated crowe recently was released from the workhouse in kansas city league of nations war aim says Taft new york june 1 â€” the league of nations has become the aim of the war said william h Taft to day in a cablegram congratulating viscount bryoe on the success of the league of nations movement launched in london arthur eddy buys yacht to give navy calumet mich june 1 â€” norman s macdonald's yacht minnemac 11 purchased by arthur j eddy chi cago attorney left to-day for chi cago to be turned over to the gov ernment as a submarine chaser cox names 27 as ohio's war cabinet cqlumbus 0 june twenty seven leading cltiiana representa tive ci every line cf activity are on the state war cabinet appointed to day by governor cox to help settle state questions * hollweg for peace without annexations london june i the daily express publishes the follow ing dispatch from its correspond ent in amsterdam the north german gazette prints chancellor von beth mann-hollweg's latest state ment of peace terms in which he declares germany does not desire to increase its territory or its political or economic power but wants merely to de fend its own territory and se cure guarantees against future attacks this is the first official ad mission that germany might make peace without indemni ties or annexations british flyers raid zeebrugge air attacks along belgian coast and artillery pave way for new offensive berlin june 1 â€” the war office to-niÃŸsht announces a success north east of solssons where patrol en - gasements took place there has been a lively firing duel in the wyt schaete bend on the artois front london june 1 â€” significant op erations on the belgian front and in the sand dunes along the north sea coast overshadowed the fighting to day elsewhere bombing raids on a large scale and artillery fire of increasing intensity artillery the time is ripe for a vigor ous offensive by the belgians tn the light of activities from ar mentieres to the north sea for the last few days it is believed a gen eral allied attempt lo turn or smash the extreme german right wing resting on the coast is in prepara tion co-operating with the belgian gun ners who are pounding at the ger man front a large squadron of brit ish aviators have raided with signal success the vcoast cities of ostend bruges and zeebrugge the british war office reports many tons of bombs were dropped with good results zeebrugge is used by germany as a great u-boat base for operations against allied ship ping â€” sunday fingerprinted balks at entering cell new york june i billy sunday went to police headquarters to-day and was fingerprinted he balked nos-hver.-at being put into a cetl sunday made a speech to recruits watched their maneuvers and thanked police commissioner woods for the way the police handled the crowds a4 the tabernacle gerard sees 2 years of war for america new york june 1 â€” two years of war is the minimum the united states may expect james w gerard former ambassador to germany de clared to-day at a luncheon of the broadway association he said ger many has an army of nearly 12,000 000 despite its looses u s may eat 2 meals a day vrooman says new york june 1 â€” carl vroo | man assistant secretary of agricul ture told the american medico-psy chological association in citse (>__ general i r â– . hti'.t_*.l i^e^^asjjsujjÃŸ mtmm king george grants nqrthcliffe audience wilson warns draft dodgers of cell terms washington june i the following proclamation was issued by the president to-day i woodrow wilson president of the united states of amer ica do hereby give warning that all persons subject to regis tration who withdraw from the jurisdiction of the united states for the purpose of evad ing said registration expose themselves upon their return to the jurisdiction of the united states to prosecution for such evasion of registration pursu ant to section 5 of the act of congress approved alay is 1917 which enacts that any person who shall willfully fail or refuse to present himself for registration or to submit there to as herein provided shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall upon conviction in a dis trict court of the united states having jurisdiction thereof be punished by imprisonment for not more than one year and shall thereupon be duly regis tered police to warn of draft rules copies of provisions to be left in every house in city begin ning at noon to-day every house in the city will be visited by policemen beginning at noon to-day and printed copies of the provisions of the selective draft law will be placed in the hands of householders with instructions to cal the attention or all men eligi ble under president wilson's call to the necessity of registering june 6 chief schuettler in an order issued last night notified all police precinct commanders to make provisions to complete the house-to-house canvass before midnight monday this is the latest development of the board of registration's endeavor to place every man subject to draft on the rolls the city council chamber was thronged until 9 o'clock last night with men who expect to be away from the city on registration day at the close 1.933 new names had been added to the lists and the half hol iday to-day will be spent on duty by city clerk igoe's registrars who may be asked to ss-ork to-morrow also every city department svlll lend a hand in complying with the war de pattment's instructions regarding the draft department heads ni-vt the members of the registration board in mayor thompson's office yesterday and promised to supply their quota of the 1,600 clerks needed for writing the duplicate draft cards to be for warded to the war department yesterday's total was another rec ord-breaker and the city cleric has 8,007 names of transients and non residents now registered bomb showihin house as argument for bill washington june 1 â€” repre sentative ilson of connecticut dur ing the discussion of the viij|risl i..-.Â»^^(l_m i continued on 6th page 3d column sl _ _ s_tta>s ..___ j__^_h_-^___m___b sk?Â»Â«"^^^__l ur fl % v ib 9f sp w j^gil___i^n^___b__h

Chicago examiner for the addrejj^where yolbpust register for draft in Chicago tuesday see it^h re-ristct-td c a patent office vol xv no 1-40 a xt saturday price tw o cents and bcbckbm tjii.ke cl'-sjflj saturday ' Chicago june 2 1917 25 are arrested for treason i fl si r ____â– hundreds of plotters to bfl monday following nfi in cincinnati wilsofl conscription can't befi ah national and state agentiw to assist in bringing in all oifi military age gregory calls on civilian volunteers to assist cincinnati 0 june i mor ra tl 2 p m 03 7 p m 80 barometric pressure reduced to sea lerei 7 3 m 30 02 7 t in 30.04 sunrise to-day 533 sunset 7:19 complete soternkent leport oa pace is . seek 250,000 hidden in bank tangle i attorney general will ask re 1 ceiver for commercial national \ / fire insurance co to-day assets of closed morgan park 1 and auburn institutional and j 50,000 deposit canceled attorney general brundage an 1 nounced in springfield last night he will file a petition to-day in the su perior court here for a receiver for the commercial national fire insur ance company mark p bransfield vice president of the auburn and morgan park state banks closed may 22 by state auditor russel is president of the insurance company the action is being taken to find the 250,000 assets for which state officials have searched in vain since the banks closed even since the auditor took charge of the banks the chief insurance ex aminer has been in Chicago trying to ascertain the extent to which the commercial national would be af fected when he requested permis sion to examine the banks insurance assets bransfield told him he could not enter unable to find securities he returned later when the bank examiners had finished their work he was not able to locate the se curities and neither bransfield nor thomas f mcfarland president of the banks would aid him the se curities are supposed to be hidden in a safe deposit box the insurance company vas a war bride it has general offices in the j otis building it has twice been warned of irregularities when the examiner's efforts were blocked su perintendent of insurance potter asked the attorney general to file a jjetition for a receiver did war business the commercial national was or ganized in 1915 with a cash capital of 200,000 its assets the first year were 387,234 total liabilities ex clusive of capital 136,128 reserve for reinsurance 100,084 surplus 51,106 the net premiums for the first year were 208,125 the total income was 221,977 with total expenditure of 98,084 it paid losses of 44,264 then marine risks on merchandise shipped to the war zone amazingly increased revenues in the first quar ter of 1916 the last covered in its re port for this quarter assets were 267,932 the profits for that quarter were 61 per~"cent and bransfietdt tet - ftr*r friends in on the ground floor one was william t rigney treasurer of the james a sackley paving com pany â€” ... mr rigney purchased 1,250 stock last december 20 he gave his note bransfield discounted it and when the state banking department listed j the loans it placed the rigney note in the doubtful class mr rigney yeste.rday posted a certified check for the full amount no more war brides for me ho , said i am going to stick to pav ing assistant state's attorney edwin j rober who has charge of the prost ecution of bransfield and mcfar land will be asked to investigate several loans totaling 200,000 which it is alleged were made to the bankers by lar e loop banks he will inqu re also into the ab i sence ie bal k's books of 50,000 | said t_^ft.ve been deposited by the â– i fcx"sehn ii jâ€”^â€”^iihf gerard sees 2 years war for america new york june i two years of war is the minimum the united states may expect james w gerard former ambassador to germany declared to-day at a luncheon of the broadway as sociation he said germany has an army of nearly 12,000,000 de spite its losses banker pais boy's ransom i father of stolen child returns from trip and waits did not see kidnapers springfield mo jnne i keet returned shortly after midnight he declared that be did not see the kid napers every circumstance points to the fact that keet in keeping with the instructions of the kidnapers handed over the money he is now waiting for news from the kidnapers telling him where the child is to be found springfield mo june i j holland keet springfield banker is believed to have paid the kidnapers of his fourteen-months-old child 10 000 ransom to-night and is waiting for the return of the boy at his home keet left tlie city to-night at 10 o'clock in an auto alone two hours later lie returned he insisted he had not seen the kidnapers themselves but everjthing indicates he followed out their instructions in turning over the ransom this morning a boy brought keet a letter which is believed to have contained new instructions demand ing 10,000 instead of 6,000 first set to-night keet demanding friends and thc police remain away started on his solitary trip he had gone but a few blocks when a second car believed to have contained the kid napers or their emissaries swung into line behind him both left the city keet's friends believe the baby will be left somewhere to-morrow and keet notified mrs kate keet mother of j hol land keet is said to be one of the wealthiest women in southwestern missouri the child is heir to her 3,000,000 estate detectives are working on the clew that pat crowe of the cudahy case may be implicated crowe recently was released from the workhouse in kansas city league of nations war aim says Taft new york june 1 â€” the league of nations has become the aim of the war said william h Taft to day in a cablegram congratulating viscount bryoe on the success of the league of nations movement launched in london arthur eddy buys yacht to give navy calumet mich june 1 â€” norman s macdonald's yacht minnemac 11 purchased by arthur j eddy chi cago attorney left to-day for chi cago to be turned over to the gov ernment as a submarine chaser cox names 27 as ohio's war cabinet cqlumbus 0 june twenty seven leading cltiiana representa tive ci every line cf activity are on the state war cabinet appointed to day by governor cox to help settle state questions * hollweg for peace without annexations london june i the daily express publishes the follow ing dispatch from its correspond ent in amsterdam the north german gazette prints chancellor von beth mann-hollweg's latest state ment of peace terms in which he declares germany does not desire to increase its territory or its political or economic power but wants merely to de fend its own territory and se cure guarantees against future attacks this is the first official ad mission that germany might make peace without indemni ties or annexations british flyers raid zeebrugge air attacks along belgian coast and artillery pave way for new offensive berlin june 1 â€” the war office to-niÃŸsht announces a success north east of solssons where patrol en - gasements took place there has been a lively firing duel in the wyt schaete bend on the artois front london june 1 â€” significant op erations on the belgian front and in the sand dunes along the north sea coast overshadowed the fighting to day elsewhere bombing raids on a large scale and artillery fire of increasing intensity artillery the time is ripe for a vigor ous offensive by the belgians tn the light of activities from ar mentieres to the north sea for the last few days it is believed a gen eral allied attempt lo turn or smash the extreme german right wing resting on the coast is in prepara tion co-operating with the belgian gun ners who are pounding at the ger man front a large squadron of brit ish aviators have raided with signal success the vcoast cities of ostend bruges and zeebrugge the british war office reports many tons of bombs were dropped with good results zeebrugge is used by germany as a great u-boat base for operations against allied ship ping â€” sunday fingerprinted balks at entering cell new york june i billy sunday went to police headquarters to-day and was fingerprinted he balked nos-hver.-at being put into a cetl sunday made a speech to recruits watched their maneuvers and thanked police commissioner woods for the way the police handled the crowds a4 the tabernacle gerard sees 2 years of war for america new york june 1 â€” two years of war is the minimum the united states may expect james w gerard former ambassador to germany de clared to-day at a luncheon of the broadway association he said ger many has an army of nearly 12,000 000 despite its looses u s may eat 2 meals a day vrooman says new york june 1 â€” carl vroo | man assistant secretary of agricul ture told the american medico-psy chological association in citse (>__ general i r â– . hti'.t_*.l i^e^^asjjsujjÃŸ mtmm king george grants nqrthcliffe audience wilson warns draft dodgers of cell terms washington june i the following proclamation was issued by the president to-day i woodrow wilson president of the united states of amer ica do hereby give warning that all persons subject to regis tration who withdraw from the jurisdiction of the united states for the purpose of evad ing said registration expose themselves upon their return to the jurisdiction of the united states to prosecution for such evasion of registration pursu ant to section 5 of the act of congress approved alay is 1917 which enacts that any person who shall willfully fail or refuse to present himself for registration or to submit there to as herein provided shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall upon conviction in a dis trict court of the united states having jurisdiction thereof be punished by imprisonment for not more than one year and shall thereupon be duly regis tered police to warn of draft rules copies of provisions to be left in every house in city begin ning at noon to-day every house in the city will be visited by policemen beginning at noon to-day and printed copies of the provisions of the selective draft law will be placed in the hands of householders with instructions to cal the attention or all men eligi ble under president wilson's call to the necessity of registering june 6 chief schuettler in an order issued last night notified all police precinct commanders to make provisions to complete the house-to-house canvass before midnight monday this is the latest development of the board of registration's endeavor to place every man subject to draft on the rolls the city council chamber was thronged until 9 o'clock last night with men who expect to be away from the city on registration day at the close 1.933 new names had been added to the lists and the half hol iday to-day will be spent on duty by city clerk igoe's registrars who may be asked to ss-ork to-morrow also every city department svlll lend a hand in complying with the war de pattment's instructions regarding the draft department heads ni-vt the members of the registration board in mayor thompson's office yesterday and promised to supply their quota of the 1,600 clerks needed for writing the duplicate draft cards to be for warded to the war department yesterday's total was another rec ord-breaker and the city cleric has 8,007 names of transients and non residents now registered bomb showihin house as argument for bill washington june 1 â€” repre sentative ilson of connecticut dur ing the discussion of the viij|risl i..-.Â»^^(l_m i continued on 6th page 3d column sl _ _ s_tta>s ..___ j__^_h_-^___m___b sk?Â»Â«"^^^__l ur fl % v ib 9f sp w j^gil___i^n^___b__h